49
Prehistoric Cave Art

Prehistoric Cave Art - Mrs. Meredith's Language Arts - HOMEtmeredith22.weebly.com/uploads/3/8/4/1/38419525/caveartslide.pdf · Prehistoric Cave Art . Pictograph: ... Coy, Fred, Thomas

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Prehistoric Cave Art

Pictograph:

Painting on a surface like a cave wall.

Petroglyph: Design carved into rock or other surface.

Why is Prehistoric Art So

Important?

It demonstrates early human expression of

beliefs or actions. In other words, it is

evidence of early human culture.

It is evidence for our unique ability for

symbolic thought, i.e., to use symbols to

represent beliefs or ideas.

Art sets us apart from the rest of the animals

who create things simply to survive; art is

one of the things that makes us uniquely

human.

Cave of Lascaux, France

Discovered by

four boys in

1940.

Caves are filled

with pictographs

and petroglyphs

that were made

about 17,000

years ago.

Think about some of these facts.

The caves were extremely dark.

The caves were not easy to access.

The paintings demonstrate amazing artistic talent.

PowerPoint created by Amy J McCray, WKU Anthropology Undergrad. 2005.

WHY WOULD THEY TAKE TIME TO PAINT

INSTEAD OF SEARCH FOR FOOD?

Possible Reasons for Cave Art

Decoration?

Represent clan/tribe?

To mark possession / show ownership?

Symbols of opposites, e.g., signs?

Male Signs of Lascaux?

Female Signs of Lascaux?

Signs Found on Artifacts in the

Cave Compared to Paintings

Antler tips

Does this indicate ownership?

Are these tribal marks?

Is Cave Art Evidence of Early

Religious Beliefs?

Traditional Interpretations of

Cave Art

Religious/spiritual purpose: to show a

connection/dependence on the animal

kingdom?

OR

Survival: a kind of “magic” (to hunt or gain

the power of the animals)?

The Shaman? Cave Art = Spiritual Connection to the Animal Kingdom

A Hunter? (The Wounded Man) Cave Art = “Good Luck” or “Magic” to Hunt Animals?

Most Recent Interpretation of

Cave Art

To express inner visions, dreams, hallucinations

To paint what they saw in a trance, i.e, altered-

states of consciousness

Animals as “spirit guides,” e.g., in South Africa, the eland

and the San shaman-hunter.

Guess the Animal(s) Game

Look at the following cave art from a variety

of sources (Lascaux, Chauvet, a few

modern interpretations, etc.) and try to

guess the kinds of animals that have been

depicted. Sometimes there are many

animals mixed together. DO NOT SHOUT

OUT THE NAMES!

Horse

Stag

Boar

Deer

Owl

Hyena and a Panther

Mammoths

Ibexes

Bear

Penguins

Bison

Bison – Modern Painting

Horse

Bison

Man (Sorcerer

of the

Chauvet Cave)

Lions and Rhinos

Horses and Bison

Rhino

Bear

Horses

Wolf – Modern Painting

Hand stencil (Chauvet Cave)

CAVE ART PROJECT

You are going to create your own cave art!

What are some similarities that you noticed in

the cave art you have seen?

Simple Pictures

Outline Drawings with Shading

What Colors are Used?

FOLLOW THE INSTRUCTIONS

YOU ARE GIVEN!

Now you will create your own cave art

for a homework assignment.

Remember, art is one of the things that makes us

human.

This is NOT Cave Art

References

Coy, Fred, Thomas C. Fuller, Larry G. Meadows, and James L.

Swauger. Rock Art of Kentucky. University Press of Kentucky,

Lexington, KY, 2003.

Google Images. 1 December 2005.

<http://www.google.com/imghp?hl=en&tab=wi&q=>

The Caves of Lascaux. 1 May 2005.

<http://www.culture.gouv.fr/culture/arcnat/lascaux/en/>

References

Coy, Fred, Thomas C. Fuller, Larry G. Meadows, and James L.

Swauger. Rock Art of Kentucky. University Press of Kentucky,

Lexington, KY, 2003.

Google Images. 1 December 2005.

<http://www.google.com/imghp?hl=en&tab=wi&q=>

The Caves of Lascaux. 1 May 2005.

<http://www.culture.gouv.fr/culture/arcnat/lascaux/en/>

THE END

Please note that a small handful of slides for

this PowerPoint were taken off the internet

and added to by William Jones, the teacher

of the Grade 6 Social Studies class, Ancient

Civilizations (2007-2013). The references

were created by the author of the original

short PowerPoint.